All Hallows’ Eve, County Mayo

2017 ◽  
pp. 327-327
Author(s):  
JOAN MCBREEN
Keyword(s):  
Crisis ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 182-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F. Connolly ◽  
Anne Cullen
Keyword(s):  

1970 ◽  
Vol 107 (6) ◽  
pp. 539-548 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Max
Keyword(s):  

SummaryCaledonian dolerite dykes in northwest County Mayo, Ireland, are differentially metamorphosed with volumes of largely unmetamorphosed dolerite grading into marginal amphibole schists with no preserved igneous textures. Deformation controlled the extent of the metamorphism. The lack of a significant differential strain in the volumes of preserved igneous rock is considered to be the cause of the preservation.


Author(s):  
Daniel Ritchie

This book reconsiders the career of an important, controversial, but neglected figure in this history of Irish Presbyterianism. The Revd Isaac Nelson is mostly remembered for his opposition to the evangelical revival of 1859, but this book demonstrates that there was much more to Nelson’s career. Nelson started out as a protégé of Henry Cooke and as an exemplary young evangelical minister. Upon aligning himself with the Belfast Anti-Slavery Society and joining forces with American abolitionists such as Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison, Nelson emerged as a powerful voice against compromise with slaveholders. One of the central objectives of this book is to show that anti-slavery, especially his involvement with the ‘Send Back the Money’ controversy in the Free Church of Scotland and the debate over fellowship with slaveholders at the Evangelical Alliance, was crucially important to the development of Nelson into one of Irish Presbyterianism’s most controversial figures. His later opposition to the 1859 Revival has often been understood as being indicative of Nelson’s opposition to evangelicalism. This book argues that such a conclusion is mistaken and that Nelson opposed the Revival as a Presbyterian evangelical. His later involvement with the Land League and the Irish Home Rule movement, including his tenure as the Member of Parliament for County Mayo, could be easily dismissed as an entirely discreditable affair. While avoiding romantic nostalgia in relation to Nelson’s nationalism, this book argues that Nelson’s basis for advocating Home Rule was not as peculiar as it might first appear.


2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 567-584
Author(s):  
Tim Edensor ◽  
Thomas SJ Smith

This paper draws on a case study of Achill Henge, County Mayo, Ireland, to examine the interplay between economic crisis, rebel creativity and shifting geographies of commemoration. Built in 2011 in a remote part of the west of Ireland, Achill Henge is a highly contested monument. Unfinished and under perennial threat of demolition, the Stonehenge-like structure was originally conceived as a ‘tomb of the Celtic Tiger’, in reference to Ireland’s ill-fated economic ‘miracle’ of the 1990s and 2000s. This paper examines this economic context before adopting two perspectives. Firstly, drawing on critical ideas about commemoration, we identify how the Henge remembers economic and political failure, materialising a unique site of subaltern memory. Situating it within memorial landscapes in Ireland, we explore how it can serve to critically analyse practices of traditional and contemporary commemoration. Secondly, we examine how its unsanctioned liminality produces a valuable, exemplary site at which numerous unregulated, playful, performative and political practices can be carried out, away from mainstream convention and commercial banality.


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